Australia’s Ashleigh Gentle pulled away from England’s Jessica Learmonth on the cycle and run sections of the mixed-team triathlon relay to help Australia to the title at the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games on Saturday.
Gentle gave Jake Birtwhistle a 40-second buffer over Alistair Brownlee that the individual silver medalist held to give their team, which also included Gillian Backhouse and Matt Hauser, the gold.
Each of the two male and two female competitors completed a 250-metre swim, seven kilometre bike ride and 1,500-metre run in the race.
Hauser and Jonny Brownlee had been locked together at the halfway stage before Gentle put pressure on Learmonth to open up the gap they needed.
Australia finished in a combined time of one hour, 17 minutes and 36 seconds, with Alistair Brownlee crossing the line 52 seconds later. New Zealand clinched bronze in a time of 1:19.28.
Gold rush continues in the pool
Australia's Cate Campbell triumphed in the pool on Saturday night, winning a gold medal in the women's 50m freestyle final. Her sister Bronte tied for second place, alongside Canada's Taylor Ruck.
"This is honestly a dream come true," said Cate Campbell in a poolside interview with Channel 7 after the race, "I had goosebumps when the crowd started shouting 'Aussie, Aussie, Aussie, Oi, Oi, Oi' just before the start."
Australia's Emily Seebohm picked up a silver medal in the women's 100m backstroke final, in a nail-biting finish with Canada's Kylie Masse, who won gold.
World champion Glaetzer eliminated after 'nightmare' blunder
World champion Matthew Glaetzer, favourite to win the men’s sprint gold at the Commonwealth Games, crashed out of the preliminary rounds on Saturday after an “embarrassing” tactical blunder against Malaysian rank outsider Muhammad Sahrom.
Sahrom had qualified last of the final 16 riders and Glaetzer was completely caught off guard when the Malaysian attacked and roared away for a stunning upset at the Anna Meares Velodrome.
Glaetzer, who claimed the keirin gold on Friday, was inconsolable after committing an “elementary mistake”.
“I was just coming into the bell too slow. I needed to be accelerating not just controlling,” the 25-year-old from Adelaide told reporters.
“It’s just hard, it’s a nightmare unfolding. With three-quarters of the lap to go, I knew I had stuffed it and had to give it all.
“I had to try and fight but the race was gone by then.
“I tried to get through with minimum effort. I just needed to get my speed going. The speed just wasn’t there.”
Glaetzer, who also took keirin gold and a team sprint bronze at Glasgow four years ago, will return on Sunday for the men’s 1,000m time trial.
“It will take me a while to get over this one but I will definitely be giving my best tomorrow,” he said.
“It’s just one ride and I’m going to absolutely rip it, try and make amends for today because I came in looking good for this and to lose it like that is embarrassing, disappointing and shattering, really.”